American football player (1929–2004)
American football player
William John Vohaska (May 17, 1929 – December 24, 2004) was an American football player.
Vohaska was born in 1929 in Riverside, Illinois . He attended Morton High School in Cicero.[ 1]
He played college football for the Illinois Fighting Illini football team at the center position from 1948 to 1950.[ 1] He was selected as captain of the 1950 Illinois Fighting Illini football team that was ranked No. 11 in the final UPI poll.[ 2] He was selected by the Associated Press as the first-team center on its 1950 College Football All-America Team .[ 3] [ 4] Illinois head coach Ray Eliot called Vohaska a "hustler and a perfectionist" and "the finest player I have ever worked with".[ 5] Vohaska also competed for the Illinois wrestling team, but he forfeited his senior year of wrestling eligibility to participate in an all-star bowl game in Hawaii.[ 6]
Vohaska later worked as a coach and teacher. He taught at Morton High School beginning in 1954 and later at Morton College.[ 7] He also founded and operated the Riverside Day Camp in Riverside, Illinois.[ 8]
Vohaska died in 2000 at a hospice home in Venice, Florida .[ 7]
References
^ a b "Vohaska Captained Gridders: AOY Candidate Named All-American Pivot" . Daily Illini. May 16, 1951.
^ "Vohaska Elected Captain Of Rose-Hued Illini Team" . The Life . Berwyn, Illinois. November 25, 1949. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com .
^ ESPN College Football Encyclopedia . ESPN Books. 2005. p. 1220. ISBN 1401337031 .
^ "Two Platoons Selected for All-American Team". Janesville Daily Gazette . December 6, 1950.
^ "Eliot Claims Vohaska As Perfectionist On Gridiron" . The Life . Berwyn, Illinois. October 5, 1949. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Ed Smason (December 13, 1950). "Vohaska Takes Hawaiian Bowl Bids" . The Daily Illini . p. 5.
^ a b "William J. Vohaska" . The Life . Berwyn, Illinois. December 31, 2004. p. 11 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Vikki Ortiz Healy (September 18, 2009). "Hazy, crazy camp days: For decades, Riverside Day Camp gave kids a place to romp all summer -- until insurance concerns rained on the parade" . Chicago Tribune . Archived from the original on July 17, 2014.